The Suzaku view of highly-ionised outflows in AGN: II -- Location, energetics and scalings with Bolometric Luminosity

Abstract

Ongoing studies with XMM-Newton have shown that powerful accretion disc winds, as revealed through highly-ionised Fe\,K-shell absorption at E>=6.7 keV, are present in a significant fraction of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) in the local Universe (Tombesi et al. 2010). In Gofford et al. (2013) we analysed a sample of 51 Suzaku-observed AGN and independently detected Fe K absorption in ~40% of the sample, and we measured the properties of the absorbing gas. In this work we build upon these results to consider the properties of the associated wind. On average, the fast winds (vout>0.01c) are located <r>~1015-18 cm (typically ~102-4 rs) from their black hole, their mass outflow rates are of the order <Mout>~0.01-1 Msun/yr or ~(0.01-1) Medd and kinetic power is constrained to <Lk> ~1043-45 erg/s, equivalent to ~(0.1-10%) Ledd. We find a fundamental correlation between the source bolometric luminosity and the wind velocity, with vout Lbolα and α=0.4+0.3-0.2$ (90% confidence), which indicates that more luminous AGN tend to harbour faster Fe K winds. The mass outflow rate Mout, kinetic power Lk and momentum flux Pout of the winds are also consequently correlated with Lbol, such that more massive and more energetic winds are present in more luminous AGN. We investigate these properties in the framework of a continuum-driven wind, showing that the observed relationships are broadly consistent with a wind being accelerated by continuum-scattering. We find that, globally, a significant fraction (~85%) of the sample can plausibly exceed the Lk/Lbol~0.5% threshold thought necessary for feedback, while 45% may also exceed the less conservative ~5% of Lbol threshold as well. This suggests that the winds may be energetically significant for AGN--host-galaxy feedback processes.

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